A reconstruction of an underground house can be seen by the public near the
Lillooet Tribal Council's offices near the reserve community of Tʼtʼikt (in English the "
T-bird Rancherie") in Lillooet, British Columbia. Called a () in the
St̓át̓imcets language, its design is based on notes drawn by
anthropologist James Teit, who had settled and married in with the
Nlakaʼpamux people of
Spences Bridge. Teit had never been to Lillooet and based his knowledge of the and the rest of his notes on that people and from interviews with a
Stʼatʼimc woman who had married into the Spences Bridge people. Teit's drawings, upon which Lillooet's rebuilt was built, also owed to his knowledge of underground houses in the Thompson and
Bonaparte valleys; in his day, people still resided in them. The reconstruction proceeded with his designs, with the caveat that the as built may not exactly resemble those used by the Stʼatʼimc, as those with the knowledge of how they were built died years before there was interest in restoring one. Quiggly towns are important landmarks in the broader context of First Nations
land claims, where they are more than symbols of native occupancy: they are the proof of ownership, as well as occupation rights including
sovereignty. Inventories of quigglies and other archaeological remains are important parts of the land claims process and archaeological protection acts may be invoked to preserve and study them. Quigglies are protected under the
British Columbia Heritage Conservation Act, on both public and private lands. Although many quiggly towns are relatively new, up to a few hundred years, many more are very ancient, as at Keatley Creek, but also throughout the Interior. And in addition to the Plateau cultures, there is an isolated appearance of quiggly-type structures on the
Oregon Coast, in what is otherwise exclusively log-frame/housepost housing area. Its occupants are believed by archaeologists to have been ancestors of the
Athapaskan people resident in the area now, who had originally used their familiar style of housing when they first migrated into the region. ==See also==